From High School to College: Gender, Immigrant Generation, and Race-Ethnicity

From High School to College: Gender, Immigrant Generation, and Race-Ethnicity

by Charles Hirschman
From High School to College: Gender, Immigrant Generation, and Race-Ethnicity

From High School to College: Gender, Immigrant Generation, and Race-Ethnicity

by Charles Hirschman

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Overview

Today, over 75 percent of high school seniors aspire to graduate from college. However, only one-third of Americans hold a bachelor’s degree, and college graduation rates vary significantly by race/ethnicity and parental socioeconomic status. If most young adults aspire to obtain a college degree, why are these disparities so great? In From High School to College, Charles Hirschman analyzes the period between leaving high school and completing college for nearly 10,000 public and private school students across the Pacific Northwest.

Hirschman finds that although there are few gender, racial, or immigration-related disparities in students’ aspirations to attend and complete college, certain groups succeed at the highest rates. For example, he finds that women achieve better high school grades and report receiving more support and encouragement from family, peers, and educators. They tend to outperform men in terms of preparing for college, enrolling in college within a year of finishing high school, and completing a degree. Similarly, second-generation immigrants are better prepared for college than first-generation immigrants, in part because they do not have to face language barriers or learn how to navigate the American educational system.

Hirschman also documents that racial disparities in college graduation rates remain stark. In his sample, 35 percent of white students graduated from college within seven years of completing high school, compared to only 19 percent of black students and 18 percent of Hispanic students. Students’ socioeconomic origins—including parental education and employment, home ownership, and family structure—account for most of the college graduation gap between disadvantaged minorities and white students. Further, while a few Asian ethnic groups have achieved college completion rates on par with whites, such as Chinese and Koreans, others, whose socioeconomic origins more resemble those of black and Hispanic students, such as Filipinos and Cambodians, also lag behind in preparedness, enrollment, and graduation from college.

With a growing number of young adults seeking college degrees, understanding the barriers that different students encounter provides vital information for social scientists and educators. From High School to College illuminates how gender, immigration, and ethnicity influence the path to college graduation.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781610448574
Publisher: Russell Sage Foundation
Publication date: 08/31/2016
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 383
File size: 5 MB

About the Author

CHARLES HIRSCHMAN is Boeing International Professor in the Department of Sociology and the Daniel J. Evans School of Public Policy and Governance at the University of Washington.

Table of Contents

Contents List of Illustrations About the Author Preface Acknowledgments Chapter 1. The Role of Education in American Society: Expanding Opportunity and Persistent Inequality Chapter 2. Recent Trends in College Graduation: The National Portrait Chapter 3. The University of Washington-Beyond High School Project: Data and Description Chapter 4. The College Pathways Model Chapter 5. Social Origins and College-Pathway Transitions Chapter 6. A Closer Look at the Role of Culture in Explaining Educational Transitions Chapter 7. Work and Extracurricular Activities in the Lives of High School Seniors Chapter 8. The Impact of Schools and the Promise of Scholarships on College-Pathway Transitions Chapter 9. Summing Up: Pathways to College Graduation Notes References Index
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